Monday, 15 February 2016

And It Has Come To This

If anyone wants to understand the shame of Afghanistan – the yearly cull of civilians, the beheadings, the execution by single shots,
the kidnapping of women – they have only to read the shocking UN report just published in Kabul. It is laced with fearful eyewitness descriptions of
brutality.

Isis features in its 87 pages with its usual depravity (in Afghanistan,
of course, not in Iraq or Syria) and the report’s statistics show clearly that,
last year, there were more civilians killed or wounded in the country than in
any year since 2009.

In 2015 alone, 3,545 civilians
were killed and 7,457 injured. Since 2009, the total civilian dead – not
soldiers, militiamen or Taliban – comes to 21,323 dead.

And this, remember, is
the graveyard of empires into which we blithely trod after 9/11 on the basis
that we would not “forget” Afghanistan again. We would see it through to the
end.

The Taliban, in the words of a Canadian commander, were “scumbags”. Our
soldiers would not die in vain. And it has come to this.

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan
(UNAMA) is a very professional institution. It has rigourously examined
eyewitness testament and its just-published report contains harrowing
quotations from victims of the country’s war.

In total, 62 per cent of civilian
deaths and injuries were caused by “anti-government elements” and 17 per cent
by “pro-government forces” – 14 per cent of these by the US-trained Afghan
“national security forces”.

But for reality, take this quotation from the
father of a man killed by Afghan army shelling in Wardak province:

“It was around 8am, and we had
finished breakfast at home when I heard an explosion. When I looked out of the
window, I saw a man running towards the mosque.

“My young son called to me and
said that my other son had been close to the mosque earlier... When I arrived,
I saw one injured person and many bodies.

“Then I found my son. He
was in the final moments of his life…I could not even touch his body or move
him. The explosion killed eight people.

“Can you imagine how difficult it is
when your son is lying in his own blood and you are crying for him?”

Or this from the witness of an
Afghan national army attack in Badghis province:

“We were having lunch in our
tent near the pistachio forest. We heard a helicopter overhead so I went
outside to watch it.

“Suddenly, the helicopter started firing rockets... and one
hit my family’s tent. I ran over to the tent and saw that the rocket killed my
wife and injured my two brothers and my sister.”

Or this from the witness to a
Taliban execution of an engineer who was working for the government:

“Two
Taliban tightened the bindings on the engineer’s hands. The Taliban commander
ordered the execution of the engineer. Without any hesitation, the two Taliban
beheaded the engineer in front of me.

“The commander instructed a Taliban member
to record that he had imposed the punishment for supporting the government. He
wrote it down and [the] Taliban posted the paper on the engineer’s body.”

Or this infinitely sad brother of a civilian killed in
crossfire in Kunduz:

“He called my mobile and said ‘Hey brother...I was shot in
my stomach... I don’t know who shot me... My injuries are serious... I can see
pieces of my own intestines on my motorcycle’, After that the line went dead.

“The next day I saw his dead body and his motorcycle on TV. His body remained in
the streets for three days until my relatives could recover it and bury him…”

And here is a woman wounded in a
suicide attack in Kabul city:

“After I had fed my baby and put him back to
sleep, I took a sip of water and returned to bed. There was a huge explosion
and our roof began to collapse.

“I saw the roof falling on me and I lost
consciousness. When I opened my eyes, I saw that my hands, legs and back were
bleeding...

“After 20 minutes, I heard my husband shouting over and over again,
‘Where are the others? My father, my father.’ The blast seriously injured him
and my son. My brother-in-law lost both of his eyes.

UNAMA also noted an increase in the number of
deliberate targeting of hospitals, clinics and health personnel – the report
deals at length with the US-Afghan attack on the MSF hospital in Kunduz that
killed 42 people in October 2015 – and 63 incidents targeting hopitals and
medical personnel by “anti-government elements”.

Isis stole all the medicine
and equipment from two health clinics in Nagarhar province. There are accounts
of Taliban fighting Isis and government militias fighting each other.

Needless to say, UNAMA plead with
all groups in the war to respect human rights and civilian lives.

But I have
long nursed the suspicion that many of these groups, including some Taliban
units and even Isis – let alone the government militias – are not fighting
about religion or government at all, more about mafia power.

Afghanistan, I fear is Mafiastan,
fuelled by the billions we ploughed into this poor country after we arrived in
2001.

An Afghan told me only a couple
of days ago how government army students were watching an American military
trainer teach them how to shoot an automatic rifle.

“The problem was that the
students knew much more about shooting than the American. They grew up with
automatic weapons in their hands. The only reason they joined was to get
knapsacks and free uniforms.”

The same old story. Incompetence,
money, grief and pain. UNAMA’s report is first rate. And it brings individual
tragedy into a brief, bright and disturbing light.

But yes, this is the country
we were going to ‘save’ a decade and a half ago.